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Published byChad Cudworth Modified over 9 years ago
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AGGRESSION and VIOLENCE
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Aggression Aggression- any behavior directed toward intentionally harming or injuring another living being Physical or verbal Can cause mental or physical harm 4 criteria 1-behavior 2-directed towards a living organism 3-Involves harm or injury(intent to inflict harm) 4-Involves intent (did it on purpose) “Good” aggression=assertiveness
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Hostile vs Instrumental Hostile Aggression- primary goal is to inflict injury or psychological harm to someone else Instrumental Aggression- occurs only b/c you want to conquer a non- aggressive goal Both involve the intent to injure and harm
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AGGRESSION Get a partner, pick a sport and come up with an example for hostile, instrumental, assertive and non-aggressive behavior
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What causes aggression 4 Theories: 1-Instinct Theory People have an innate instinct to be aggressive that builds up until it’s expressed Catharsis-aggression is released or blow off through socially acceptable means Corey had a bad day at school so he takes it out in hitting practice at football 2-Frustration-Aggression Theory Aggression is the direct result of a frustration that occurs b/c of failure Frustrated b/c you are losing a game, so you become over aggressive in a game
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What causes aggression 3-Social –Learning Theory Says that aggression is learned through observing others who model particular behaviors followed by receiving reinforcement for exhibiting similar actions Ex-Everyone cheers at a fight at NHL, so Billy decides to start a fight in pee wee hockey Revised Frustration-Aggression Theory Frustration does not always lead to aggression but it increases the likelihood of aggression by increasing anger
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Spectators/athletes Observing a sport does not lower the level of the spectators aggression Watching violent contact sports increases a spectator’s readiness to be aggressive Rivalries are associated with fan violence Fans Fight Athletes view aggressive acts as appropriate in the sport environment
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What We Should Know Understand when aggression is likely to occur: Frustration, losing, perceived unfair officiating, embarrassed, physically in pain, playing below their capabilities Modify aggressive reactions Teach athletes to control emotions, remove from situation Teach appropriate behavior: what is right? What is wrong? Sports Violence - Sports Law
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Controlling Spectators Develop alcohol policies Penalize spectators Strict officiating-officials must call ALL behavior issues Coach involvement Deter media displays of aggression USA Today
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